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Alphabetical [« »] monsters 1 month 2 months 14 moon 36 moral 8 moralise 1 moralisés 1 | Frequency [« »] 36 days 36 ever 36 garden 36 moon 36 near 36 parallels 36 same | Joseph Jacobs Indian Fairy Tales IntraText - Concordances moon |
Tale
1 Pre | that quaint myth, "How Sun, Moon, and Wind went out to Dinner." 2 Labam | Then she shone like the moon and her beauty made night 3 Boy | The Boy who had a Moon on his Forehead~and a Star 4 Boy | been seen. He will have a moon on his forehead and a star 5 Boy | beautiful little son, with a moon on his forehead and a star 6 Boy | loveliest child! He has a moon on his forehead and a star 7 Boy | she said. "See, he has a moon on his forehead and a star 8 Boy | boy inside hen. He has a moon on his. forehead and a star 9 Boy | common-looking, ugly man; and his moon and star were hidden.~Then 10 Boy | grand young prince with a moon on his forehead and a star 11 Boy | handsome prince. He has a moon on his forehead and a star 12 Boy | prince that is! He has a moon on his forehead and a star 13 Boy | in this country. He has a moon on his forehead and a star 14 Boy | noticed particularly the moon on his forehead and' the 15 Boy | handsome prince, with a moon on his forehead and a star 16 Fish | message: - " O friend, the moon is full; twelve months make 17 Fish | and tell her that the moon is new, and that I can only 18 Demon | free from my hands, as the moon is disgorged from the jaws 19 Dinner| How Sun, Moon, and Wind~went out to Dinner~ 20 Dinner| out to Dinner~ONE day Sun, Moon, and Wind went out to dine 21 Dinner| mother - but the gentle Moon did not forget her. Of every 22 Dinner| for my own pleasure." But Moon said, "Mother, fetch a plate, 23 Dinner| so disagreeable.)~But to Moon she said, "Daughter, because 24 Dinner| And that is why the Moon's light is so soft, and 25 StNote| untranslated.~XXII. THE BOY WITH MOON ON FOREHEAD.~Source. - Miss 26 StNote| reward is translated to the moon, where he can be seen to 27 StNote| day as "the hare in the moon." Every Buddhist is reminded 28 StNote| self-sacrifice whenever the moon is full, and it is easy 29 StNote| Buddha with the hare in the moon. It is well known that Easterns 30 StNote| explain an eclipse of the moon as due to its being swallowed 31 StNote| account of an eclipse of the moon? This suggestion receives 32 StNote| Indian myth, swallow the moon at times of eclipse. The 33 StNote| Buddhist explanation why the moon - i.e. the hare in the moon, 34 StNote| moon - i.e. the hare in the moon, i.e. Buddha - is not altogether 35 StNote| Mr. Kipling.~XXVII. SUN, MOON, AND WIND.~Source. - Miss 36 StNote| traditional mode of the Moon's conveyance of dinner to